This is why one the the fastest growing things is something like HuluTV or YouTubeTV. It has a traditional TV experience without having to engineer an antenna, and you can turn it on and off easily if you have budget constraints. Yes, someone has to connect to the Internet, but honestly, more and more, even “older” people are used to that now. I’m in my mid-40s. My dad is in his mid-70s, and people his age have still been working around computers, etc. for decades, some of them. Someone in their 50s or 60s today is more likely than not to be comfortable going online to watch video, unlike 20 years ago. In fact, Baby Boomers are more and more in the cord cutting (dump TV) category than Gen X. Gen X is keeping pay TV alive as nearly half of the pay TV audience, even though we’re a smaller generation.I really feel for older people who are so bewildered about the constant changing of broadcasting. Roof antennas to cable, to sattelite, smart phones, texting, streaming..........I have overheard conversations wherein the person(s) just gave up & don't have anything as it keeps changing, they don't understand or can't afford.